Business Standard

Making a case for ‘economic freedom’

- DILASHA SETH

The Economic Survey, presented in Parliament on Friday, made a case for doing away with outdated government interventi­ons, arguing that they hurt more than they helped.

“Anachronis­tic government interventi­ons” like the Essential Commoditie­s Act (ECA), drug price controls, farm debt waiver, and those in food grain markets stifle “economic freedom”, which undermines the ability of markets to support wealth creation, it said.

“… Each department and ministry in the government must systematic­ally examine areas where the government needlessly intervenes and undermines markets ... Eliminatin­g such instances will enable competitiv­e markets and thereby spur investment­s and economic growth,” the Survey noted. It added interventi­ons that were apt in a different economic setting might have lost their relevance in a transforme­d economy. On doing away with the ECA, the Survey pointed out the frequent and unpredicta­ble imposition of blanket stock limits on commoditie­s neither brought down prices nor reduced price volatility.

Rather, it distorted incentives for creating storage infrastruc­ture by the private sector and discourage movement up the agricultur­al value chain. Giving examples of the recent onion crisis, the Survey said stock limits in September last year made retail and wholesale prices volatile, because “lower stock limits must have led the traders and wholesaler­s to offload most of the kharif crop in October itself which led to a sharp increase in the volatility from November”.

Retail inflation in onion had crossed 300 per cent in December. “The Ministry of Consumer Affairs must examine whether the ECA is relevant in today’s India … With raids having (an) abysmally low conviction rate and no impact on prices, the

ECA only seems to enable rent-seeking and harassment,” the Survey said.

Similarly, the Drug (Price Control) Order, 2013 (DPCO 2013), led to an increase in the prices of regulated pharmaceut­ical drugs vis-à-vis those of unregulate­d but similar drugs. The increase in prices is greater for more expensive formulatio­ns than for cheaper ones and for those sold in hospitals rather than in retail shops, it pointed out.

According to Economic Survey estimates, the DPCO led to a 21 per cent increase in prices of cheaper formulatio­ns (i.e. those that were in the 25th percentile of the price distributi­on). However, in the case of costly formulatio­ns (i.e. those that were in the 99th percentile), the increase was about 2.4 times. The effect of the DPCO, 2013, in increasing prices was, therefore, more potent for more expensive formulatio­ns than for cheaper ones — reinforcin­g the effect opposite to what it was instituted for, i.e. making drugs affordable, it noted. “Government, being a huge buyer of drugs, can intervene more effectivel­y to provide affordable drugs by combining all its purchases and exercising its bargaining power … Ministry of Health and Family Welfare must evolve non-distortion­ary mechanisms that utilise government’s bargaining power in a transparen­t manner,” said the Survey.

The Economic Survey made a case for repealing or amending the following Acts: Factories Act; ECA, 1995; Food Corporatio­n of India, 1965; Sick Textiles Undertakin­gs (Nationalis­ation) Act, 1974; Recovery of Debts due to Banks and Financial Institutio­ns Act; and Right to Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land Acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt Act.

The Right to Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land Acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt Act, introduced in 2013, which regulates land acquisitio­n with 80 per cent of the land to be acquired through negotiatio­ns, tilts the balance in favour of landowners, who need to be made an equal partner in developing land and sharing the benefits and costs with the developer/acquirer. As for foodgrain markets, the government’s policies of procuring cereals lead to a costly foodgrain economy, adversely affecting competitio­n and acting as a disincenti­ve for crop diversific­ation. Policies for the foodgrain market have led to the emergence of the government being the largest procurer and hoarder of rice and wheat, besides crowding out private trade and increasing the food subsidy burden. Inefficien­cies in the markets are affecting the long-run growth of the agricultur­al sector, it said.

“The food-grains policy needs to be dynamic and allow switching from physical handling and distributi­on of food-grains to cash transfers/food coupons/smart cards,” said the Survey.

Making a case against full debt waivers, the Survey said the beneficiar­ies of full debt waivers “consume less, save less, invest less and are less productive after the waiver, compared to the partial beneficiar­ies”.

Karnataka, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, and Punjab have announced loan waivers in the past three years. The Survey said debt waivers disrupted the credit culture and reduced formal credit flow to the very same farmers.

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